EBP Flashcards
Differentiate between natural history and clinical course
Natural history: status of the condition without treatment
Clinical course: status of the condition WITH treatment
What are the 5 steps in determining prognosis?
- Ask an answerable question about prognosis
- P.O.T (population, outcome, time frame)
- eg. for an obese soccer player with a stress fracture, what is the likelihood of returning to soccer within 3 months - Find the evidence
- prospective/retrospective?
- - Can you believe the study?
- What is the study of prognosis telling you?
- Apply the result
What are the 3 criteria to believing a study?
- Representative sample from well defined population?
- clear inclusion/exlcusion criteria
- consecutive or ALL pts = representative! - Was there an inception cohort?
- inception cohort = taken at uniform point in the disease
- survivor cohort = all people with the condition - various stages - Complete/near compelete follow up?
<15% loss (<30% for long term studies)
How to calculate odds ratio?
Whatever your prognostic factor is (eg. high and low income) - if you’re looking to see whether low income is a prognostic factor for a certain outcome, put that on TOP
low income: relapsed/non relapsed
high income: relapsed/non relapsed
OR>1 more likely to occur
OR<1 less likely to occur
How to calculate CI for prognosis means in CONTINUOUS outcomes?
95% CI = mean +/- 3 * SD/√2N, where N=total number of subjects
How to calculate CI for prognosis means in DICHOTOMOUS outcomes?
95% CI = mean +/- 100/√2N, where N=total number of subjects
*use 100 if its written as a percentage (eg. 56%); use 1 if its written as a fraction (eg. 0.56)
REMEMBER TO ACCOUNT FOR DROP OUT WHEN PUTTING IN N!
How to calculate risk?
How to calculate CI for risk?
Risk = No. of people with the outcome/total number of people
CI = % risk +/- 100/√2N
- in this case N is the total number of people but only in the group that you were calculating the risk for - NOT the the total number of people in the whole group
Prospective vs retrospective
Prospective:
- starts with a group of people and follows them forwards in time; fewer potential sources of bias and confounders; outcome is common
Retrospective:
- looks backwards and examines exposures to suspected risk or protection factors in relation to an outcome that is established at the start of the study
- onfounding and bias are more common